Yesterday, 3 August, Care Opinion launched as the online feedback service for Northern Ireland’s health and social care system. All of us at Care Opinion are immensely proud that our service is now being used by patients, carers and staff across Northern Ireland.
Working in partnership with NI’s Public Health Agency, we’re looking forward to the learning, and the challenges, ahead as we continue to innovate for public benefit.
The Health Minister Robin Swann launches Care Opinion in Northern Ireland. Care Opinion gives service users the opportunity to tell their story about Health and Social Care services. Share your story:
https://t.co/9vN4TD8lJOhttps://t.co/cLECexXryU#CareOpinionNI#ihaveastoryNI
— Public Health Agency (@publichealthni) August 4, 2020
As is so often the case, our adoption by the health and social care system has a long history. In fact, we first talked with Northern Ireland’s health leaders back in 2008. But things moved more rapidly after the publication of the Bengoa Report in 2016, which included the recommendation that “the HSC should consider whether there needs to be a platform for a more open and immediate conversation with staff and service users”.
All the recommendations of the Bengoa Report were accepted by then health minister Michelle O'Neill in the 10-year reform plan “Delivering Together”. Subsequently, progress on this issue stalled with the suspension of the Northern Ireland Assembly in early 2017, until the issue again gathered pace in early 2019. Care Opinion was selected as the system-wide platform and preparations began in earnest during the latter part of 2019 for an expected launch in April 2020 – which, of course, was then further delayed by Covid-19.
Despite the difficulties, what has remained constant is the ambition and commitment of Northern Ireland’s health and social care leaders, and this is reflected in the wide scope of services now able to use Care Opinion: this includes the five health and social care trusts, the ambulance service, the Patient and Client Council, the Regulation and Quality Improvement Authority, two universities and all general practices in the region.
In this way, Northern Ireland is pushing further and faster even than Scotland, which has made Care Opinion available across all health boards since 2014.
I often feel that the greatest challenge is not technology, but fear
But whatever the scale, and whatever the software, we must focus on our purpose: to make it safe and simple to share feedback in ways which lead to learning and change. While Care Opinion platform matters, and embodies our values, what matters more is how it is used by people.
And in this respect, I often feel that the greatest challenge is not technology, but fear. Patients and carers avoid being honest, for fear that their care will suffer. Staff avoid inviting feedback, for fear they will be criticised, and then avoid responding to it, for fear they will say the wrong thing.
And yet we know that, as feedback is sought and used openly for improvement, fear subsides and is replaced by the growth of understanding and trust between those who use and those who provide services.
So we should expect no sudden change as a result of yesterday’s launch. But I am confident that, over time, Care Opinion will play its part in fostering an open, patient-centred and learning culture across the health and social care services of Northern Ireland.
Care Opinion now serves Northern Ireland's health and social care system
Care Opinion now serves Northern Ireland's health and social care system https://careopinionuk-staging.azurewebsites.net/resources/blog-resources/1-images/8fd59d356e334f238493cc7c2f4e2838.png Care Opinion 0114 281 6256 https://www.careopinion.org.uk /content/uk/logos/co-header-logo-2020-default.pngUpdate from Care Opinion
Posted by James Munro, Chief executive, Care Opinion, on
About: Health and Social Care Northern Ireland
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